Hey, It Worked! Hyundai Stock Soars After Ioniq Brand Announcement

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Maybe established automakers can impress investors with electric promises, after all. Following Hyundai’s announcement that it will turn the Ioniq nameplate into an electric vehicle brand encompassing several models, the company’s stock lit the afterburners, achieving its best share price showing since 2017.

Lofty electric ambitions aren’t a sure-fire way to juice a stock, as Ford has shown year after painful year, but they can achieve results.

After its previous close of 147,000 won, share prices on the Korea Exchange (KRX) briefly hit 172,500 won Monday, with the company’s stock up 15.6 percent at last count. Sister company Kia Motors enjoyed some of Hyundai’s cast-offs, with its stock rising nearly 10 percent.

Investors no doubt believe the range of Ioniq models, each riding atop a new modular electric vehicle platform, will have contemporaries in the Kia stable. Sharing is caring.

“With the launch of a new EV family brand, shares of Hyundai Motor are rallying today, reflecting investors’ hope that the auto industry will outperform compared to other industries,” SK Securities analyst Kwon Soon-woo told Reuters.

In the U.S., electric vehicle startups like Nikola have seen their valuation soar after announcing a competitive electric vehicle, even if said vehicle is years from production. Now fairly established itself (and somehow profitable during the second quarter of this year), Tesla’s stock has the strength of a team of oxen on a cocaine bender. “Legacy” automakers Ford and General Motors, despite having the manufacturing might and cash needed to turn blueprint into reality, seldom see their own green vehicle ambitions translate into Wall Street enthusiasm.

By 2024, Hyundai aims to launch three new electric products under the Ioniq banner: a midsize SUV, a sedan, and a large SUV, each carrying a name currently associated with a compact hatchback model offered in EV, hybrid, and PHEV guises. The first vehicle, the Ioniq 5 midsizer, will appear early next year.

By 2025, Hyundai also wants a 10-percent slice of the world’s electric vehicle market. Music to investors’ ears, apparently.

[Image: Hyundai]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Carson D A friend of mine bought a Cayenne GTS last week. I was amazed how small the back seat is. Did I expect it to offer limousine comfort like a Honda CR-V? I guess not. That it is far more confining and uncomfortable than any 4-door Civic made in the past 18 years was surprising. It reminded me of another friend's Mercedes-Benz CLS550 from a dozen years ago. It seems like a big car, but really it was a 2+2 with the utilitarian appearance of a 4-door sedan. The Cayenne is just an even more utilitarian looking 2+2. I suppose the back seat is bigger than the one in the Porsche my mother drove 30 years ago. The Cayenne's luggage bay is huge, but Porsche's GTs rarely had problems there either.
  • Stanley Steamer Oh well, I liked the Legacy. It didn't help that they ruined it's unique style after 2020. It was a classy looking sedan up to that point.
  • Jalop1991 https://notthebee.com/article/these-people-wore-stop-signs-to-prank-self-driving-cars-and-this-is-a-trend-i-could-totally-get-behindFull self stopping.
  • Lou_BC Summit Racing was wise to pull the parts. It damages their reputation. I've used Summit Racing for Jeep parts that I could not find elsewhere.
  • MaintenanceCosts The crossover is now just "the car," part 261.
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